Back in 2015, Lego builder Tomáš Kašpařík created this humongous 12 feet (365cm) high Lego Ferris Wheel for a LEGO festival in Prague. The man used over 40,000 parts, including 2 LEGO Power Functions motors, to create the Wheel, and took around 300 hours of time to build it.
Scatterbrained is a brand new trivia show in which different hosts do a deep dive into a single topic. In this episode, learn all about Sesame Street – from the muppets who star in the show to the humans who created them!
A teacher in Ghana helps students prepare for a computer studies exam – despite the school having no computers. Richard Appiah Akoto demonstrates the features using a blackboard.
Ghanaian students in the year they turn 15 must pass an exam to move on to the next level of education (high school) and the exam includes written questions on information and communication technology. As the school where Akoto teaches has no computers, he uses chalk drawings to help prepare them, spending around 30 minutes before a class starts to prepare the picture.
After posting a photo of his demonstration of Microsoft Word, Akoto attracted worldwide attention where a Ghanaian comedian saw and shared the picture.
Akoto does have a laptop but says he can’t rely on that for teaching ICT. That’s partly because the battery is unreliable, but also because the Ghanian syllabus and potential exam equestions explicitly refer to a desktop computer with separate monitor, keyboard and mouse.
Microsoft responded to Akoto’s moment in the spotlight by offering to donate a device for the classroom. Akoto took the offer graciously, but noted he’d really need 50 computers to be able to teach the subject adequately. He also noted that his technique is not unusual for ICT teaching in rural areas of the country.
Eyeballs are unique organs, providing many animals with the ability to interpret the light waves in the world around them, but what are these squishy parts made of? Find out in this episode of the SciShow!
In this short video by Bullet Theory Films, a .45 bullet gets splitted in half (in super slow motion) after hitting the sharp edge of an axe. It’s just like that scene in the 1981 cult classic San Basilio!
LEGO Enthusiast and master builder Ryan “Brickman” McNaught, along with a team of a few people, have recently recreated the DeLorean DMC-12 from Back to the Future using 65,143 Lego bricks. The model is a little different than the original, but it does feature working lights and smoke dispensers to bring a little authenticity to the iconic car.
The model was designed by myself and Russell Søren-Larsen, then built by Claire Ashworth, Luke Cini, Mitchell Kruik, Clay Mellington and Mark Curnow over 290 hours using 65,143 LEGO® bricks.
Back to the Future DeLorean Model made with permissions from NBC Universal.